Biodiversity decline with increasing crop productivity in agricultural fields revealed by satellite remote sensing

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http://hdl.handle.net/10138/334341

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Abdi , A , Carrié , R , Sidemo-Holm , W , Cai , Z , Boke Olén , N , Smith , H G , Eklundh , L & Ekroos , J E 2021 , ' Biodiversity decline with increasing crop productivity in agricultural fields revealed by satellite remote sensing ' , Ecological Indicators , vol. 130 , 108098 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108098

Title: Biodiversity decline with increasing crop productivity in agricultural fields revealed by satellite remote sensing
Author: Abdi, Abdulhakim; Carrié, Romain; Sidemo-Holm, William; Cai, Zhanzhang; Boke Olén, Niklas; Smith, Henrik G; Eklundh, Lars; Ekroos, Johan Edvard
Contributor organization: Plant Production Sciences
Department of Agricultural Sciences
Date: 2021-11
Language: eng
Number of pages: 9
Belongs to series: Ecological Indicators
ISSN: 1470-160X
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108098
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/334341
Abstract: Increasing land-use intensity is a main driver of biodiversity loss in farmland, but measuring proxies for land-use intensity across entire landscapes is challenging. Here, we develop a novel method for the assessment of the impact of land-use intensity on biodiversity in agricultural landscapes using remote sensing parameters derived from the Sentinel-2 satellites. We link crop phenology and productivity parameters derived from time-series of a two-band enhanced vegetation index with biodiversity indicators (insect pollinators and insect-pollinated vascular plants) in agricultural fields in southern Sweden, with contrasting land management (i.e. conventional and organic farming). Our results show that arable land-use intensity in cereal systems dominated by spring-sown cereals can be approximated using Sentinel-2 productivity parameters. This was shown by the significant positive correlations between the amplitude and maximum value of the enhanced vegetation index on one side and farmer reported yields on the other. We also found that conventional cereal fields had 17% higher maximum and 13% higher amplitude of their enhanced vegetation index than organic fields. Sentinel-2 derived parameters were more strongly correlated with the abundance and species richness of bumblebees and the richness of vascular plants than the abundance and species richness of butterflies. The relationships we found between biodiversity and crop production proxies are consistent with predictions that increasing agricultural land-use intensity decreases field biodiversity. The newly developed method based on crop phenology and productivity parameters derived from Sentinel-2 data serves as a proof of concept for the assessment of the impact of land-use intensity on biodiversity over cereal fields across larger areas. It enables the estimation of arable productivity in cereal systems, which can then be used by ecologists and develop tools for land managers as a proxy for land-use intensity. Coupled with spatially explicit databases on agricultural land-use, this method will enable crop-specific cereal productivity estimation across large geographical regions.
Subject: 4111 Agronomy
Sentinel-2
Land-use intensity
Agriculture
Pollinators
Phenology
Crop biomass
LAND-USE INTENSITY
FARMLAND BIODIVERSITY
VEGETATION INDEX
SPECIES RICHNESS
LANDSCAPE
DIVERSITY
MANAGEMENT
INTENSIFICATION
BEES
ABUNDANCE
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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